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[b]IMEB[/b] ([b]Institut international de musique électroacoustique de Bourges[/b]) was a French electroacoustic music center, one of the National Centers for Musical Creation in France, active from 1995 to 2011. Originally founded in 1970 as [url=https://discogs.com/label/295679]Groupe de musique électroacoustique de Bourges[/url] by composers [a=Françoise Barrière] and [a=Christian Clozier], the collective eventually evolved into the full-scale Institute, changing its name in the mid-nineties. Throughout the years, IMEB had been hosting [i]Concours International de Bourges[/i], one of the most prestigious competitions for academic electronica in Europe. From 1971 to 2009, IMEB also curated and organized 39 editions of prominent [b]Synthèse Festival[/b]. Numerous composers from all over the world stayed as residents at Bourges, producing and recording many innovative and award-winning works at IMEB. Bourges Institute had two studios with analog and digital instruments, rare modular synthesizers, and various sound processing tools, which were continuously upgraded and evolved to provide cutting-edge solutions for composing, recording and mixing 'new music' in all genres. Certain unique technology, particularly custom interfaces to enable full digital interconnectedness of various pre-MIDI analog instruments, were designed and constructed at the Institute, as well as several original instruments. The extensive catalog of works produced by GMEB/IMEB in forty years includes music by the core composers of the group, such as [a=Françoise Barrière], [a=Pierre Boeswillwald], [a=Christian Clozier], and [a=Alain Savouret], and pieces by multiple visiting composers, including [a=José Manuel Berenguer] (Spain), [a=Gerald Bennett] (Switzerland), [a=Yves Daoust] (Canada), [a=Beatriz Ferreyra] and [a=Horacio Vaggione] (Argentina), [a=Sten Hanson] and [a=Erik Mikael Karlsson] (Sweden), [a=Georg Katzer] (Germany), [a=Maxence Mercier] (France), and [a=Nicola Sani] (Italy). IMEB studios also served as a laboratory for scientific research in synthesis, composition, polyphonic sound diffusion, interpretation of electroacoustic music in live performance, and new pedagogical techniques. Looking for new ways to introduce electroacoustic music to a wider audience, in the early seventies Christian Clozier developed a portable educational synthesizer, [i]Gmebogosse[/i], constructed by [a=Jean-Claude Le Duc], and accompanied with a series of special elementary school exercises and group games to provide basic training in listening, discovering, composing, and rebuilding new sounds. Since 1998, this unique instrument has been known as [i]Cybersongosse[/i]. Two consoles with various switches, knobs, faders and sensors are triggering commands on the connected Mac/PC computer. Each console includes a complete synthesis ensemble, four inputs for external sources, three racks with 8 digital 'tape' samplers, effects processor (filter/envelope/pitch-shift/delay/EQ/reverb), microphone, an array of external motion capture sensors, and 20-ch mixer for easy capturing, sequencing, and stereo/quadraphonic recording. For an adult audience, GMEB/IMEB had been organizing and hosting multiple symposiums, workshops, and international conferences in Bourges and abroad, some in collaboration with [l=C.I.M.E.] and [l=UNESCO], as well as developing professional courses and curriculums for IUFM (Institut Universitaire de Formation des Maîtres) and various 'écoles normales' and 'grandes écoles' across the country. As a record label, GMEB/IMEB had been producing and releasing two CD collections since 1986: [l= Cultures Électroniques], a series of compilations with award-winning works from Concours International de Musique Electroacoustique, and [l=Chrysopée Électronique] – solo albums and themed compilations of works recorded over the years at Bourges studios. The label was distributed by [l=Le Chant Du Monde] / [l=Harmonia Mundi] in the earlier years, but continued to use [b]LDC xxxxxx[/b] catalog numbers even after this contract was terminated. In addition, IMEB published several periodicals and books, including four issues of [i]Faire[/i] (1973–80) magazine, and the proceedings of [i]Académie internationale de musique électroacoustique[/i] '98–2008 in eight volumes. All GMEB/IMEB releases and publications were issued through an associated publishing house [l=Mnémosyne Musique Média]. Since 2008, despite the 'Centre National de Création Musicale' government-endorsed status and wide international recognition of their activities, IMEB started experiencing sudden and severe budget cuts in the unexplainable attempt by the French Ministry of Culture to shut the Institute down. Against the advice of all other partners, several international institutions, and [url=https://discogs.com/label/109486]SACEM[/url] rights society, the government demanded IMEB to cease all activities, including Festival Synthèse, the competitions, and scheduled publications. Bourges Institute decided to protest this decision, so they continued their work, and established Support Committee to draw international attention to this problem. In October 2009, IMEB sent a petition with 4500 signatures from 63 countries to the Ministry of Culture. According to the open letter published by Barrière and Clozier on IMEB's website in July 2011, the French Minister of Culture and Communication Frédéric Mitterrand 'paid no attention' to all the efforts, refused to meet with the Committee, and didn't even acknowledge receiving the petition. In 2010, the government finally succeeded with an actual shutdown at the Institute, and even fired five staff members in retaliation, so IMEB founders focused their final efforts on preserving and digitizing the musical and historical heritage of IMEB. Part of their archive, including 6975 compositions and 1080 scores from 63 countries, were deposited to the new collection at the Audio-Visual and Music Departments at [l=Bibliothèque Nationale De France], to safely store and keep them available for musicologists and researchers, with main biographical and musicological information published at [i]misame.org[/i] website. [b]MISAME[/b], [b]Mnémothèque Internationale des Sciences et Arts en Musique Electroacoustique[/b], was originally established in 2004, and signed a special agreement with IMEB to assist the Institute in the worldwide diffusion and promotion. In the light of latest unfortunate events, this international organization was made responsible for communicating, publishing, and diffusing IMEB projects, archives and documents (compositions, research & development, instruments, pedagogy), thus ensuring that Bourges Institute's rich and historically significant heritage is kept alive. IMEB officially ceased to exist in July 2011. [l=Mnémosyne Musique Média] publishing, which was originally promised to stay alive, became inactive several years later, and MISAME website eventually went offline as well. All sound files from IMEB are now preserved by Bibliothèque nationale de France. Each file is described by the online catalogue of National Library of France: http://bit.ly/imeb-sound-files

By Kyle Larson